A KEY defence witness in the David
Irving libel trial has been selected to serve on a
government panel to assess claims over art stolen from
Holocaust victims.

The panel will examine claims from Holocaust survivors
who believe art stolen from them by the Nazis has ended up
in British galleries and museums.

Cambridge University historian Professor Richard
Evans, is one of 11 members of the panel appointed by
Arts Minister Alan Howarth and headed by former Lord
Chief Justice of Appeal Sir David Hirst. They will
adjudicate on whether the claims are justified and, if so,
decide on the form of compensation.

Professor Evans featured in some
of the fiercest exchanges with Mr Irving during the High
Court action
and his evidence contributed to Professor Deborah
Lipstadt's victory.

Others on the panel include Peter Oppenheimer,
president of the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies
(and a director of the JC); Sir Terry Helser, a
Victoria and Albert Museum trustee; and art dealer Martin
Levy, a member of the council of the Jewish Museum.

Although Jewish leaders have generally expressed
satisfaction with the panel, the row over its terms of
reference continued this week, with the Board of Deputies
claiming that the system "is weighted against
claimants."

The Board expressed "bitter disappointment" that it was
being left to the panel to recommend whether to return
looted art found in British galleries to the rightful
owners, or their heirs. The panel could, instead, decide to
pay compensation, or display beside an exhibit an account of
its history in the Nazi period.

A statement issued by the Commission for Looted Art in
Europe said "the only just solution" was "restitution of the
property."

In France, meanwhile, the Matteoli commission report on
Jewish assets stolen during the war has been submitted to
Premier Lionel Jospin.

The 10-volume report indicates that between 90 and 95 per
cent of stolen financial property was returned to its owners
after the Liberation.

London, April 21, 2000

THE
appointment of Professor Richard Evans to this panel smacks
of a reward; it is bound to raise fresh questions about his
pro-Jewish sympathies. Notwithstanding that Evans was paid
over £71,181 by Lipstadt's lawyers for the evidence he
gave in the trial -- Mr Irving did not pay his witnesses --
Evans signed a statement at the end of his expert evidence,
as required by the law, attesting that he was neutral
between the parties in the Irving vs. Lipstadt
action.